That’s what happens after a team gives in the way the Raptors did in a humiliating display of basketball.

The Raptors locker room door stayed closed for much longer than it normally does following last night’s 131-99 drubbing at the hands of a Utah Jazz team that was without leading scorer Al Jefferson and reserve big man Derrick Favours.

“Tonight is the first time I’ve seen us give in to whatever it was and that’s what we talked about in the team meeting,” head coach Dwane Casey said.

“Hopefully that’s the start of togetherness; but again, talk is cheap. We have got to get back to the fundamentals of basketball, whether it’s guarding the ball, rebounding, transition. Everything was exposed tonight from a team level.”

Guard DeMar DeRozan didn’t even attempt to put any kind of happy face on this dog’s breakfast.

“We just let it get away,” he said. “It was all on us. They didn’t do nothing we haven’t seen. It was just on us. Getting back. Getting rebounds. Getting loose balls. Stopping our man, stopping penetration.”

The Raptors actually had a 10-point lead in this game in the first quarter but a trio of 30-point quarters that followed by the Jazz has the Raptors back to square one.

“Everybody said what they had to say,” DeRozan said of the post-game meeting, which was not merely your garden-variety coach implosion, warranted as one of those may have been.

“We have to realize this is time to step up — everybody from myself to the last guy on the team,” DeRozan said. Everyone has to step up and play with pride because it’s getting out of hand right now.”

Getting out of hand is probably a tame way of putting it. For the first time all season player’s were actually on each other during timeouts and not in a, ‘Come on, we can do this’ kind of way.

DeRozan believes they got it all worked out after the game, but the only thing that cures a breakdown like that is a few wins and right now the Raptors don’t exactly look like a team capable of that.

What got this beatdown started was a barrage of successful three pointers from a Jazz team that used 14 in triple overtime the last time these two teams met a few weeks ago to secure a win.

Casey was well aware, and made his players as well, how important it was going to be to protect the paint first and then get out to the three-point line and defend the Jazz shooters.

For about three quarters the paint protection was actually decent, but the second job, getting out to the shooters, never happened and the Jazz bombed away, hitting 13 of 23 for a ridiculous 53% success rate.

“That was the difference in the second quarter, you can’t dare a team,” Casey said. “I don’t care if you’re the five-man, the four, the three, you have to get to an open guy and we just worked on that very thing the day before. The rotations were not there and that started it.”

While the Jazz had their way from three the Raptors were life and death to see one fall hitting just seven of their own 24 attempts, four of those from newcomer Mickael Pietrus.

“We’re going to get it fixed, whatever it takes, whatever seven or eight guys it takes to get it done, we’ll get it done,” Casey said.

Casey did not make a change to the starting roster as he was hinting at doing prior to Friday’s game. He stayed with his starting five, but based on his comments last night, all bets are off for the next game.

It was the ninth consecutive road loss for the Raps and ninth overall in the past 10 games.

They are now 0-for-3 on this five-game trip.

The Raptors actually began the game looking pretty decent, with both Bargnani and Pietrus leading the way.

Bargnani, the focal point of the fan wrath these days if social media is any gauge, was one of the better if not the best Raptor on the floor Friday night.

In addition to leading the team in scoring with 20 points he was doing his job on the boards, hauling down a team high eight rebounds.

None of it mattered, however, and now the Raptors will try to start again in Los Angeles where they take on the Clippers Sunday afternoon.